An estimated 687,000 Texas women will fall into gap because the state has not expanded Medicaid so they could qualify for health coverage, according to a Washington D.C.-based advocacy group for women and girls.

In a new report, the National Women’s Law Center found more than three million women across the country will not have affordable coverage because they live in the 25 states that haven’t expanded Medicaid. The study is based on data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance
System.

In Texas, almost 60 percent of low-income, uninsured women who needed to see a doctor within the last 12 months didn’t do so because they couldn’t afford it, according to the report. Meanwhile, nearly 31 percent of low-income, insured women went without care.

Also, about 85 percent of low-income, insured Texas women said they had a doctor or health care provider, compared to 40 percent of low-income, uninsured women in Texas, the study found.